Doing President Donald Trump’s bidding, the
Republican-controlled US
House on Wednesday approved legislation that would potentially prevent
millions of Americans from participating in federal elections by instituting
draconian voter ID requirements, mandating documentary proof of citizenship to
register to vote, and requiring states to share voter information with the
Department of Homeland Security.
The White House-backed legislation, an updated version of
the so-called SAVE Act that the House approved in 2024, passed with the support
of every Republican who took part in the vote and one Democrat, Rep. Henry
Cuellar of Texas—notably the recipient of a pardon from the president.
Election experts and watchdog groups said the bill
represents a massive assault on the right to vote, with many of its
provisions directly in line with what Trump has demanded ahead of
the 2026 midterms.
“Congressional Republicans are
attempting to commandeer the midterm election cycle and increase voting margins
in President Trump’s favor by putting a finger on the scale of our elections
and pushing nonsensical, anti-democratic laws to stop voters from casting a
ballot,” said Public
Citizen co-president Lisa Gilbert. “This overreaching, un-American
bill tacks on unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles to vote, all of which would harm
voters across the political spectrum.”
The bill is likely dead-on arrival in the narrowly
divided Senate, with every Democrat and at least one Republican, Lisa Murkowski
of Alaska, expected to oppose it.
But its passage through the House with unanimous support
from the Republican caucus—whose members claim to be driven by a desire to
prevent noncitizens from voting, which is already unlawful, and combat voter
fraud, which is virtually nonexistent—alarmed rights advocates.
“This obvious attack on our voting rights is
based on completely unfounded claims,” said Alison Gill, director of
nominations and democracy at
the National Women’s Law Center. “The lawmakers supporting this measure clearly
aim to suppress the votes of women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ people in order to rig
elections and remain in power.”
“It is already illegal for noncitizens to vote in federal
elections, which means that the SAVE Act 2.0 creates a convoluted and dystopian
solution to a problem that does not actually exist,” Gill added. “Americans
strongly opposed legislation when Congress considered this issue last year, and
yet the congressional Republicans are trying to double down on this deceptive
policy.”
“The forces that are driving the Trump
administration’s anti-voter agenda are also pressuring Congress to pass
legislation that would silence millions of Americans.”
Analysts estimate that more than 21 million Americans lack ready access to the documents the Republican legislation would require people to furnish in order to register to vote, such as a passport and a birth certificate.
The Brennan Center for Justice notes that the measure “would disenfranchise Americans
of all ages and races, but younger voters and voters of color would suffer
disproportionately. Likewise, millions of women whose married names aren’t on
their birth certificates or passports would face extra steps just to make their
voices heard.”
In addition to strict documentary requirements for
registration and voting, the bill would force states to conduct frequent purges
of their voter rolls and share information with the Department of Homeland
Security in a purported effort to verify voters’ citizenship—changes that could
disenfranchise many eligible voters. The legislation would also establish
criminal penalties for election workers who register
voters without the required documentary proof of citizenship.
Bruce Spiva, senior vice president at Campaign Legal
Center, noted that the GOP’s renewed voter suppression push “comes as the FBI is seizing ballots
from the 2020 election, President Trump is calling for our elections to be
‘nationalized,’ and the US Department
of Justice is suing more than 20 states to get access to voters’
private data.”
“This is not a coincidence,” said Spiva. “The forces that are driving the Trump administration’s anti-voter agenda are also pressuring Congress to pass legislation that would silence millions of Americans by making it harder to participate in our elections.” In an op-ed for the New York Times on Thursday, the Brennan Center’s Sean Morales-Doyle warned that “the campaign to rig our elections is well underway.”
“It will be incumbent on all of us—election officials,
advocates, state law enforcement, and voters—to see the administration’s
efforts for what they are and to fight back,” wrote Morales-Doyle.
-Jake Johnson, Common Dreams

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